United to furlough 688 flight attendants

CHICAGO (AP) — United Airlines plans to furlough 688 flight attendants after it didn't get enough of them to take a voluntary buyout.

The airline has been shrinking a little, and it announced last year that it is aiming to cut $2 billion in annual expenses. It has offered voluntary buyouts to flight attendants and some ground workers were offered early retirement.

At the same time, it is still operating what amounts to two separate airlines since the 2010 merger with Continental. Flight attendants still fly separately on the planes that came from those two airlines.

The airline has had more flight attendants who came from the United side than it needs, spokeswoman Megan McCarthy said on Thursday. Meanwhile, the Continental side hired 485 flight attendants last year.

United has been offering voluntary furloughs, but many flight attendants who took those in recent years are now coming back, McCarthy said. The new, involuntary furloughs take effect in April and are open-ended.

Besides the furloughs, United has eliminated about 1,250 flight attendant positions through voluntary buyouts or job shares, McCarthy said. The airline employs about 25,000 flight attendants.

Flying capacity at the combined airline is down 3 percent since 2010, not counting regional partners.

The Association of Flight Attendants-CWA said it offered ideas to reduce the need for furloughs.

"What it comes down to is simply the promise of United's merger not being realized," said Greg Davidowitch, the head of the union at United.

United also said Thursday that about 1,200 ground workers and pilots volunteered for early retirement at the end of last year, at a cost of about $64 million during the fourth quarter.

Shares of Chicago-based United Continental Holdings Inc. rose 71 cents to close at $47.21.